Large power outages in 14 states across Venezuela due to sabotage, even in
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In Order to Overcome Corruption in Venezuela

Sep 3rd 2013, by Luis Britto García - Aporrea
[image: "Revolution without corruption" reads this mural in
Venezuela]

"Revolution without corruption" reads this mural in Venezuela

1. What to do about corruption? Change the laws? Change the culture?  Above
all, act. Laws are useless if they aren’t applied, as are values that
aren’t instilled. Our penal code typifies a large range of crimes against
the public, how about we start applying it?

2. For big things, big solutions. If corruption is overflowing in the
institutional mechanisms, it’s imperative to strengthen them. Since half
way through the last century, all the Venezuelan presidents have had
Extraordinary Powers. According to number 8 of article 236 of the
constitution, an enabling law should bestow powers on the elected president
in order to legislate by decree, on among other topics, corruption. Shame
on those who oppose it.

3. A bad thing that spans all the state powers should be fought by all of
them. The legislative power should pass a drastic anti-corruption law. In
the same way, it should broaden authorisations and responsibilities against
corruption through precise reforms to the Organic Law of National Public
Tax Revenue, the Organic Law of General Auditing of the Republic, the Law
of Public Administration, the Organic Law of Decentralised Public
Administration, the Organic Law of General Prosecution of the Republic, the
Organic Law of the Attorney General’s Office of the Republic, and the Penal
Code, among others.

4. If you plant red tape, you’ll harvest corruption. The situation makes
the thief and the red tape the administrator. A harvest of new laws isn’t
enough; a pruning of requirements and useless proceedings is required. With
the Law for the Simplification of Administrative Procedures at hand, the
executive power should start to study the procedures demanded so that each
citizen can enjoy their rights, with the aim of speeding-up and eliminating
redundant or unnecessary procedures. Real and functional information from
the administration should be achieved. No deck chair information, with
websites that never open or that go and take a siesta. Even less,
pedestrian information that obliges the unhappy citizen to start the
procedure on the computer to then conclude it with a manila folder on foot.
It wouldn’t hurt to have an office which follows the irresistible growth of
some vernacular fortunes and carries out an up-to-date study of the
movement of capital from neighbouring countries and its possible
legitimisation in our country.

5. The Judicial Power should sentence relentlessly, apply the powers of the
judiciary in order to ensure the correct functioning of the judges and
tribunals, and suggest the necessary reforms to the legislative, above all
to the cautionary measures; a favourite resource of corrupt people and of
financial criminals so that they can be let out on bail and flee the
country.

6. Corruption in Venezuela has historic roots. Maybe a means of production
is nothing more than a means of stabilised corruption. The conquest was a
colossal looting operation which used force to appropriate common goods and
work for the benefit of a negligible minority. In colonial caste society
official posts were sold and their discriminatory stratification was
prolonged during the republic, leaving fast wealth as the main resource for
social ascent. The oligarchic republic and other systems maintained this
unequal distribution of the wealth from larceny. With the explosion of the
petroleum and mining based economy, public goods and earnings overtook the
private economy, and a batch of newly rich and newly corrupt people came
out of the trafficking of concessions and the milking of the state.
Efficient judicial and accountable institutional systems to compel
faultless management of public things haven’t been created. And even when
they exist, they aren’t applied, and that’s why some politicians have
indicated that in Venezuela there are no reasons to rob. Just as there is
no legal punishment, nor is there a social punishment. The only punishment
is the collective one, which ends up consigning the unburied cadaver in the
waste dump of history, where the Fourth Republic was brought down, and
where we hope that hope doesn’t come to an end.

7. So we end where we should have begun. The most important power is the
social one. Corruption will decline when it is loathed instead of
celebrated. Grassroots organisations should implement social auditing and
monitoring of the fulfilling of tasks by the administration and denounce
failures there. The education system should consolidate the values of
solidarity, cooperation, and selflessness instead of pillaging. The media
should combat the culture of larceny and wealth at any cost. Educational
sermons are worth nothing in the presence of gangster-dramas or the
glorifying of corrupt people trapped red-handed. Corruption begins in the
spirit. We get the shivers every time that we see principles compromised,
values haggled over, or revolutionaries sell their souls to opportunists.

*Translated by Tamara Pearson for Venezuelanalysis.com*
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*Source URL (retrieved on 03/09/2013 - 11:02pm):*
http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/9997

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